06/03/2026
Luck of the Lawn applications close June 13. Here's the one question worth asking before you decide whether to apply.
We launched Luck of the Lawn ten days ago and the response from Jackson has been incredible. Thank you to everyone who has already applied and to everyone who shared it with a neighbor.
Applications close in nine days — June 13.
We've heard from a lot of people who are thinking about applying but haven't yet.
And the hesitation usually comes down to some version of the same question: does this actually work?
Here's our honest answer.
We don't know what your specific lawn will do. Every yard has a different history — different grass varieties, different years of synthetic input use, different compaction and drainage situations. What we know is the biology. What we know is the science. And what we know is that living soil consistently outperforms dead soil when given the chance to rebuild.
That's exactly why we're doing this. Five real Jackson front yards. Real before and after documentation. Real soil tests. Real homeowner interviews at the end of the season.
Not because we're certain of the outcome on every yard. Because we're confident enough in the biology to let the results speak for themselves in public.
Struggling lawns are actually our preferred applicants — the bigger the challenge, the more compelling the data.
If you've been thinking about it — nine days left. Five spots total. The application takes less than five minutes.
What's your lawn got to lose? 🍀
06/01/2026
Summer heat is coming. Here's why some lawns and pastures will survive it and others won't — and it has nothing to do with how much you water.
West Tennessee summers are brutal on plants. Temperatures above 90°F for weeks at a time. Rainfall that comes in floods or not at all. And every year the same lawns and pastures struggle while others seem to shrug it off.
The difference isn't irrigation. It's soil structure.
Here's what's happening underground in healthy soil versus depleted soil when summer stress arrives.
Healthy living soil has what's called aggregate structure — tiny clumps of soil particles held together by fungal threads, bacterial secretions, and organic matter. Those aggregates create microscopic pore spaces throughout the soil profile. Those pore spaces hold water like a sponge and release it slowly to plant roots during dry periods. A soil with strong aggregate structure can hold significantly more plant-available water than compacted, biologically dead soil of the same type.
Depleted soil — soil that has been repeatedly hit with synthetic inputs, herbicides, and compaction — loses that aggregate structure over time. The biology that builds and maintains it is gone. What's left is essentially dirt that either puddles and runs off when it rains or dries out and cracks when it doesn't. Neither condition supports a plant under summer stress.
This is why two lawns side by side in the same neighborhood with the same rainfall look completely different in July. One has living soil underneath it. One doesn't.
Worm castings and extract both directly contribute to soil aggregate development.
The castings introduce organic matter and microbial life that begins rebuilding structure immediately. The extract delivers concentrated biology — including fungal spores and beneficial bacteria — that actively builds the pore network your soil needs to handle summer stress.
It doesn't happen in one application. It builds over a season. But the lawns and pastures that go into summer with improving biology consistently outperform those still running on synthetics when the heat arrives.
We're watching this play out in real time in our 2026 field trials. Data is on the website. 🌱
05/30/2026
Five Jackson lawns are getting our best biological treatment free this year. Here's how to get the same results on your own timeline — anywhere in the country.
The Luck of the Lawn campaign is getting a lot of attention this week and we love seeing Jackson homeowners excited about what's possible for their lawns.
But here's something worth knowing — you don't have to be one of the five selected participants to start fixing your soil right now.
The same products we'll be applying on every Luck of the Lawn visit are available to anyone, anywhere in the lower 48 states.
🪱 WORM CASTINGS — available now.
Sifted to 3mm. Pure product — no rocks, no mulch, no fillers. Lab-tested for live microbial activity. Stored in breathable canvas bags so the biology arrives alive. Top-dress your lawn at half to one inch. Work into bare patches. Can't burn. Can't overdose. Apply anytime.
💧 WORM CASTINGS EXTRACT — available now.
Liquid biology applied directly to your soil and root zone. For lawns: one gallon per one thousand to two thousand square feet monthly through the growing season. The same professional-grade extract we use on every treatment visit — available by the gallon or in bulk.
Individual gallons at $8. Bulk pricing at $5 per gallon for orders of 250 gallons or more.
Compost is sold out until at least June 1. Castings and extract are in stock and ready to ship.
Don't wait for a free spot. Start your lawn's soil transition now. 🍀
05/29/2026
Luck of the Lawn isn't a one-year experiment. It's a launch. Here's what's coming in 2027 — and why this year matters.
We've had a lot of people ask since Monday — what if I don't get selected for one of the five spots?
Fair question. Here's the honest answer.
Luck of the Lawn 2026 is a proof-of-concept. Five yards. Documented results. Real Jackson homeowners telling the real story of what happens when you stop feeding the bag and start feeding the soil.
In 2027 — Luck of the Lawn becomes a full residential lawn care service in Jackson.
Not five free yards. A commercial service available to any Jackson homeowner who wants professional biological lawn treatment on a recurring basis. The five 2026 participants are building the proof that makes 2027 possible.
We're not taking 2027 bookings yet. But we are taking names.
If you're a Jackson homeowner who wants a healthier lawn without the chemical dependency cycle — and you want to be first in line when the 2027 service opens — there's a waitlist link on the lawn care page.
And if you want to be one of the five who get the full 2026 season free — applications are still open through June 13. Five spots. The clock is running.
Jackson deserves better lawn care. We're building it. 🍀
— Rexx, Twisted Luck Sustainable Solutions
05/27/2026
What does a professional biological lawn treatment actually look like? Here's exactly what the five Luck of the Lawn participants will receive.
A lot of people have asked since Monday's announcement — what exactly does a full season of Luck of the Lawn treatment involve?
Here's the breakdown.
It starts with an Initial Visit — no product applied. We come out, walk the lawn with the homeowner, document the before condition with photos and soil assessment, and talk about what inputs have been used over the years. That baseline conversation and documentation is the foundation everything else is measured against.
Then four professional treatment visits across the 2026 growing season:
Visit 1 — Both worm castings and extract applied together. This is the full biological foundation being established. The castings go down as a top dressing across the treatment area. The extract follows as a liquid application delivering concentrated beneficial microorganisms directly into the soil profile.
Visits 2, 3, and 4 — Extract applications continuing through the season. Supporting the biology through the growth season, the heat stress period, and into the fall root development stretch.
It closes with a Closing Visit — end of season interview, before/after documentation reveal, and the homeowner's honest assessment of what happened.
Total retail value: $400. Completely free for the five selected participants.
What makes a struggling lawn the best candidate? Yards with a history of synthetic chemical use, visible thinning, compaction, poor color, or persistent w**d pressure get strong consideration — because those conditions offer the most compelling transformation potential.
Applications are open through June 13. Five spots. If you know a Jackson homeowner who needs this — tag them below. 🍀
05/25/2026
Luck of the Lawn 2026 is officially open. Five Jackson, Tennessee front yards. One full season. Zero cost. Applications open today.
We've been teasing this all week. Here it is.
Luck of the Lawn is a 2026 proof-of-concept campaign from Twisted Luck Sustainable Solutions. We are selecting five front yards across the Jackson area to receive a full season of professional biological soil treatment — completely free — in exchange for participating in a documented case study.
Here's exactly what the five selected homeowners receive:
🍀 An initial visit — we come out, walk your lawn, document the before condition, and talk about what's been done to it over the years
🍀 Four professional treatment visits across the 2026 growing season — worm castings and extract applied by us, on your lawn, at no cost
🍀 A closing visit — end of season documentation, before/after reveal, and your honest assessment of what happened
🍀 Total retail value: $400
What we get in return: real data from real Jackson lawns. Soil tests. Before and after photos. Your honest story. The truth about what living soil biology actually does when you stop feeding the bag and start feeding the ground.
Your lawn doesn't need another bag of synthetic fertilizer. It needs living soil. And we're going to prove it — in five front yards across Jackson where your neighbors can drive by and see it for themselves.
Who should apply:
🍀 Jackson area homeowners with a front yard visible from a public road
🍀 Any lawn condition welcome — struggling lawns make the best data
🍀 Willing to be photographed and interviewed before and after
🍀 Committed to the full 2026 season
Five spots. That's it. Applications close June 13.
As the website says — you're not maintaining your lawn. You're maintaining your dependence on the product. This is how that ends.
Apply now — link below. 🍀
05/23/2026
Memorial Day weekend is here. While you're outside looking at your lawn — here's what's actually going on underneath it.
Memorial Day weekend is the unofficial start to summer. Cookouts, yard work, outdoor projects. And for a lot of West Tennessee homeowners — the moment you really start noticing what your lawn looks like.
If you're standing in your yard this weekend thinking it should look better than it does — you're probably right. And the answer usually isn't more fertilizer.
Here's what's actually happening underneath a struggling lawn:
The soil biology is compromised. Decades of synthetic inputs, compaction, and chemical treatments have reduced the microbial life that makes soil function. Without that biology, the soil can't cycle nutrients, can't hold water efficiently, and can't support the kind of deep root development that produces genuinely healthy turf.
You can keep treating the symptom. Or you can fix the soil.
Worm castings and extract work on any lawn at any stage — newly seeded, established, struggling, or already pretty good. There is no wrong time to start rebuilding soil biology. The biology goes to work the moment it makes contact with your soil.
Compost is still sold out until at least June 1. Worm castings and extract are in stock and ready to ship nationwide.
And if you're a Jackson, Tennessee homeowner — check back Monday. We have something launching that you'll want to see. 🍀
👉 www.twistedluck.com/category/all-products
05/22/2026
🍀Luck of the Lawn is coming Monday. 5 Jackson, Tennessee lawns. Free for the entire 2026 growing season. Here's what you need to know before applications open.
We teased this Monday and the response told us West Tennessee is ready for something like this.
So here it is.
Twisted Luck Sustainable Solutions is launching Luck of the Lawn 2026 — and applications open this Memorial Day Monday, May 25.
Here's what it is:
We are selecting 5 Jackson, Tennessee homeowners to receive professional worm castings and extract applications on their lawn — completely free — for the entire 2026 growing season.
Not a one-time treatment. The whole season.
Here's what we get in return: before and after documentation. Soil tests. Photo and video updates throughout the season. An honest look at what living soil biology actually does to a West Tennessee lawn over the course of a full year.
This is real data from real lawns in our own community. And we're giving away five full seasons of treatment to get it.
Who should apply:
🍀 Jackson, Tennessee homeowners
🍀 Any lawn condition welcome — struggling lawns make the best data
🍀 Willing to be photographed and interviewed before, during, and after
🍀 Committed to the full 2026 season
Applications open Monday May 25. Five spots. That's it.
Tag a Jackson homeowner who needs this. Share this post. Details and the application link drop Monday morning.
— Rexx, Twisted Luck Sustainable Solutions
www.twistedluck.com
05/20/2026
The real reason your plants keep getting attacked. It's not the bugs' fault.
Here's something most gardeners and farmers have never been told — and once you understand it, you can't unsee it.
Pests don't attack plants randomly. They target weakness. Specifically, they target plants that are nutritionally deficient, soft from excess synthetic nitrogen, and low in natural sugar content.
There's a measurement called Brix — it measures the dissolved sugars and minerals in plant sap. Plants with high Brix readings have dense, complete nutrition. And here's the remarkable part: many common insects literally cannot digest high-sugar sap efficiently. Their biology isn't built for it. So they move on and find something weaker.
Now think about what synthetic nitrogen does. It produces rapid, lush, green vegetative growth that looks healthy but has thin cell walls and elevated water content. That soft, fast growth is exactly what aphids, whiteflies, and other pests are attracted to. You're growing the most appealing possible target and then wondering why you need pesticides.
It's the same reason a lion doesn't chase the strongest zebra. It's the same reason buzzards clean up roadkill — nature's cleanup crew targets what's already compromised. Pests are nature's signal that something in the soil isn't right.
The solution isn't more pesticide. It's better soil biology.
When you rebuild the microbial ecosystem in your soil — through worm castings, extract, and finished compost — you rebuild the plant's ability to produce high Brix sap. The plant develops systemic immunity. Deep defenses. Pest repellent properties that come from the inside out.
You're not spraying a problem away. You're eliminating the conditions that created it.
That's what living soil does. That's what we build. 🪱
www.twistedluck.com